The NBA drew 170 million U.S. viewers during the 2025-26 regular season across its four primary broadcast platforms, which is its strongest viewership figures in 24 years and an 86 percent increase over the prior season.
The numbers mark Year 1 of the league’s 11-year, $76 billion-plus media rights agreement signed in 2024, which added Amazon Prime Video and restored NBC/Peacock to the broadcast lineup alongside returning partners ABC/ESPN and NBA TV.
Average viewership across all four platforms reached its highest point in 13 years, climbing 35 percent over last season. A total of 57 telecasts drew average audiences of at least 2 million viewers, the most since 2011-12.
Fans logged more than 920 million total viewing hours, up 25% year-over-year and also the best figure since 2011-12.
The All-Star Game on NBC averaged 8.8 million viewers, the largest midseason showcase audience in 15 years. NBA Cup group stage games posted a 90 percent viewership gain.
Off the court, the league’s social media platforms generated a record 228 billion views according to Videocites, a 13% rise over last season.
Arena attendance over the past three seasons has surpassed any comparable three-year span in league history, the NBA added.